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Rutherglen railway station

Coordinates:55°49′52″N4°12′49″W / 55.8312°N 4.2136°W /55.8312; -4.2136
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Railway station in South Lanarkshire, Scotland
For the closed railway station in Victoria, Australia, seeRutherglen railway station, Victoria.

‹ ThetemplateInfobox station is beingconsidered for merging. ›
Rutherglen

Scottish Gaelic:An Ruadh-Ghleann[1]
National Rail
Platform viewed from east walkway, February 2016
General information
LocationRutherglen,South Lanarkshire
Scotland
Coordinates55°49′52″N4°12′49″W / 55.8312°N 4.2136°W /55.8312; -4.2136
Grid referenceNS615619
Managed byScotRail
Transit authoritySPT
Platforms2
Other information
Station codeRUT
History
Original companyCaledonian Railway
Pre-groupingCaledonian Railway
Post-groupingLondon Midland and Scottish Railway
Key dates
1 June 1849Original station opened
31 March 1879Original station closed; New station opened
5 October 1964GCR platforms closed.
5 November 1979Opening of theArgyle Line platforms;WCML slow line platforms closed.
Passengers
2019/20Decrease 1.015 million
2020/21Decrease 0.213 million
2021/22Increase 0.490 million
2022/23Increase 0.549 million
2023/24Increase 0.813 million
Location
Map
Notes
Passenger statistics from theOffice of Rail and Road

Rutherglen railway station is in the town centre ofRutherglen,South Lanarkshire,Scotland, and lies on theArgyle Line. The station is served by a singleisland platform, connected to the street by a footbridge.

History

[edit]

Earlier stations

[edit]

The first Rutherglen station was opened on theCaledonian Railway's line to Glasgow on 1 June 1849,[2] or possibly 1842.[citation needed] Theside platforms existed beneath today's footbridge at the base of thetriangular junction.[3] Serving about 70 passenger trains daily, it was replaced on 31 March 1879 by the second one stretching below the Farmeloan Road bridge.[2][4][5] This, and subsequent stations, had both side platforms andisland platforms. The third station served the west side and base of the triangle near the respective angle.[6] The fourth station at the mid east side of the triangle complemented the third one.[7] Despite the three rebuilds, access remained a concern.[8]

The remains of the old platform, beside theWest Coast Main Line, February 2016.

Passenger services to London Road station, that began 1 April 1879, ceased when theGlasgow Central Railway underground commenced on 1 November 1895.[citation needed]

Main article:The Switchback (CR)

Services on the latter route were withdrawn as part of theBeeching Axe on 5 October 1964. Signal boxes have existed at the three angles.[6][9] In 1973, a central control room in Glasgow replaced the final one[10] at the apex.

On 6 May 1974, theWest Coast Main Line (WCML) was opened to electrified services, which included Hamilton Circle services through the slow line island platform.[11]

1979 station

[edit]

Routes

[edit]
South eastward view towards the WCML, 2008
South eastward view towards the WCML, 2016
Southeastward view towards the WCML, April 2008, and after lift tower and M74 viaduct exist, February 2016.

No longer accessible to the public, but still visible, the former WCML island platform was closed when the new one opened in the vicinity of the fourth station on 5 November 1979 forArgyle Line services along the former route viaDalmarnock. Consequently, theDMU services on theWhifflet Line that terminated atGlasgow Central High Level bypassed the stop from 1979. When the Whifflet Line was electrified in December 2014, these trains were rerouted to the Argyle Line and the stop restored.[12]

Eastwards, the Argyle Line formed a connection with the WCML and either diverged to the Whifflet Line, or continued on the WCML towardsCambuslang before continuing to the southern ends of the Argyle Line (Hamilton Circle,Cumbernauld orLarkhall). Since the 2014 electrification, passengers for stations to Motherwell and Lanark viaBellshill have changed at Cambuslang.[citation needed]

Passenger access

[edit]

Access to the present platform is by a large (covered) footbridge from the Main Street, over the high-level railway to stairs down to the island platform and ticket office. To create apram friendly and a disability-compliant option,[13] the installation of alift was completed in April 2009. Thelevel crossing at the opposite end is restricted to staff accessing the nearby First Engineering Training Centre.[citation needed]

2010 M74 works

[edit]

During 2010, theM74 extension included themotorway flyover at the north end of the platform.[citation needed]

Accidents

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1865: A train fatally struck a contractor's employee in the vicinity.[14]

1867: A train ran over and killed a platelayer.[15]

1869: In the Rutherglen tunnel about 150 yards (137 m) west of the then station, an eastbound passenger train ran into the rear of a coal train that was awaiting the line ahead to clear. Several passengers suffered serious injuries.[16]

1876: An eastbound passenger train failed to observe a signal and crashed into the rear of a local passenger train at the station. Damage and injuries were minor.[17]

1880: A westbound passenger express overran a signal and smashed into the rear of a local passenger train departing the station. Although the rolling stock sustained extensive damage, only one passenger suffered a serious injury.[18][19] The engine driver's four-month sentence wascommuted to two months.[20] That year, a signalman, on stepping off the main line to avoid an approaching passenger train, sustained internal injuries on being struck by a coal train on the loop line.[21]

1887: During dense fog, an eastbound passenger train collided with a stationary pilot engine 260 yards (238 m) east of the station. Believing the latter was on a siding, the signalman had given the passenger train a clear signal. Damage was significant and eight passengers sustained cuts and bruises.[22]

1898: A porter seized a passenger, who was boarding a moving train. In attempting to drag him from the compartment, the man dropped between the train and platform. Run over by the wheels, the victim died within hours.[23]

1901: An engine struck a track labourer.[24] Months later, an express fatally struck an employee, who inattentively stepped from a goods van in the station vicinity.[25]

1904: An engine fatally struck a brakeman.[26]

1906: A fireman was crushed between a wagon and engine.[27] Later that year, the wheels of a milk train crushed a porter's foot.[28]

1907: A brakeman sustained a serious head injury when struck from behind by a train.[29]

1930: During heavy fog, an eastbound passenger train smashed into the rear coach of another passenger train stopped at a signal about 100 yards (91 m) west of the station. Believing the first train had passed, the signalman had inadvertently set the signal to red. Twelve passengers suffered fractures or other serious injuries, and 65 minor injuries.[30]

1931: An eastbound passenger train struck a passenger train being shunted about 300 yards (274 m) out of the station. Neither train carrying passengers, no injuries occurred, but one train was partially derailed and a carriage was badly damaged.[31]

1936: Shortly before Rutherglen, a woman inexplicably fell from a westbound passenger train.[32]

1938: An axle failure on a westbound passenger train caused a derailment where the final coach mounted the platform and landed on its side. The aftermath was one fatality and multiple serious injuries.[33]

1940: Fatality, but details unspecified.[34]

1944: Fatality, but details unspecified.[35]

1975: A westbound cement train struck an eastbound passenger train, which was crossing from the slow to fast line on leaving the station. Only one passenger in the four derailed coaches sustained serious injuries.[36]

1977: An express fatally struck a three-year-old boy who had wandered through a broken fence and fallen down an embankment onto the line.[37]

Services

[edit]
Passenger trains per hour[38]
DirectionTerminusViaMon–SatSun
(10am–6pm)
EastboundCumbernauldMotherwell,Hamilton Central1
MotherwellHamilton Central orWhifflet23
LarkhallHamilton Central21
Whifflet1
WestboundDalmuirYoker orSinger2
Milngavie22
Balloch22
Preceding stationNational RailNational RailFollowing station
Cambuslang
orCarmyle
 ScotRail
Argyle Line
 Dalmarnock
 Historical railways 
Terminus Caledonian Railway
London Road branch
 Bridgeton(original)
Terminus Caledonian Railway
Glasgow Central Railway
 Dalmarnock
Line and station open
Cambuslang
Line and station open
 Caledonian Railway
Clydesdale Junction Railway
 Terminus
Terminus Caledonian Railway
Polloc and Govan Railway and others
 Glasgow Central
(High Level)

Line and station open

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^Brailsford 2017, Gaelic/English Station Index.
  2. ^abButt (1999)
  3. ^"Rutherglen map, 1857–58".www.maps.nls.uk.
  4. ^"Glasgow Herald, 10 Jul 1877".www.news.google.com. p. 3.
  5. ^"Glasgow map, 1882".www.maps.nls.uk.
  6. ^ab"Glasgow map, 1893A".www.maps.nls.uk.
  7. ^"Glasgow map, 1898–99".www.maps.nls.uk.
  8. ^"Glasgow Herald, 24 Nov 1897".www.news.google.com. p. 11.
  9. ^"Glasgow map, 1893B".www.maps.nls.uk.
  10. ^"Old Rutherglen railway stations".www.hiddenglasgow.com.
  11. ^Electric Locomotives on Scottish Railways, p. 1942, atGoogle Books
  12. ^Great Britain's Railways, A New History, p. 381, atGoogle Books
  13. ^"Rutherglen Station to bridge accessibility gap".www.networkrailmediacentre.co.uk.
  14. ^Railways (Accidents, Traffic Tables, &c) 1866, 3 Feb 1865, p. 17, atGoogle Books
  15. ^Railways (Accidents, Traffic Tables, &c) 1867–68, 11 jul 1867, p. 17, atGoogle Books
  16. ^"Glasgow Herald, 3 Mar 1869".www.news.google.com. p. 4.
  17. ^"Glasgow Herald, 19 Aug 1876".www.news.google.com. p. 4.
  18. ^"Glasgow Herald, 26 Jan 1880".www.news.google.com. p. 7.
  19. ^"Glasgow Herald, 26 Feb 1880".www.news.google.com. p. 6.
  20. ^"Glasgow Herald, 27 May 1880".www.news.google.com. p. 4.
  21. ^"Glasgow Herald, 30 Apr 1880".www.news.google.com. p. 6.
  22. ^"Glasgow Herald, 17 Jan 1887".www.news.google.com. p. 8.
  23. ^"Glasgow Herald, 26 Oct 1898".www.news.google.com. p. 11.
  24. ^"Railway accident reference 1053/90/188".www.nationalarchives.gov.uk.
  25. ^"Dundee Evening Post, 26 Jun 1901".www.randomscottishhistory.com. 2 March 2020. p. 3.
  26. ^"Railway accident reference 1053/93/601".www.nationalarchives.gov.uk.
  27. ^"Railway accident reference 1053/95/266".www.nationalarchives.gov.uk.
  28. ^"Railway accident reference 1053/95/724".www.nationalarchives.gov.uk.
  29. ^"Railway accident reference 1053/96/733".www.nationalarchives.gov.uk.
  30. ^"Glasgow Herald, 18 Feb 1930".www.news.google.com. pp. 9–10.
    "Glasgow Herald, 26 Feb 1930".www.news.google.com. p. 15.
    "Glasgow Herald, 28 Jun 1930".www.news.google.com. p. 9.
  31. ^"Glasgow Herald, 25 Sep 1931".www.news.google.com. p. 10.
  32. ^"Glasgow Herald, 11 May 1936".www.news.google.com. p. 13.
  33. ^"Glasgow Herald, 11 Apr 1938".www.news.google.com. p. 14.
    "Glasgow Herald, 14 Apr 1938".www.news.google.com. pp. 11–12.
  34. ^"Railway accident reference 1053/126/190".www.nationalarchives.gov.uk.
  35. ^"Railway accident reference 1053/130/302".www.nationalarchives.gov.uk.
  36. ^"Railway Archives, 31 May 1975".www.railwaysarchive.co.uk.
  37. ^"Glasgow Herald, 1 Sep 1977".www.news.google.com. p. 1.
  38. ^"May 2020 NRT: Table 225".www.networkrail.co.uk.

References

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External links

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City centre stations
Other stations
Glasgow Subway stations
Disused stations
Transport in Glasgow
UK railway stations
Rutherglen Town HallRutherglen Scottish Parliament constituency areaCambuslang Old Parish Church
Railway stations served byScotRail
Grouped byScottish Parliament regions. Stations listed in italics arerequest stops.
Glasgow
Central Scotland
Lothian
South Scotland
(and England)
West Scotland
Mid Scotland and Fife
North East Scotland
Highlands
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